Lesson's Learned From the High Court's Gun Decision

Liberals are trying to spin the U.S. Supreme Court's dramatic decision in the gun case as creating a "new" constitutional right. They couldn't be more wrong; the Supreme Court simply restated the individual right the Founding Fathers wrote into the Second Amendment that has been part of the Constitution since Dec. 15, 1791.

The decision in District of Columbia v. Heller was a victory for the view, often expressed by Justice Antonin Scalia, that the U.S. Constitution means what it says. Liberals, who believe that the Supreme Court can invent new rights, seem to think that a right stated in the Constitution only exists after the Supreme Court ratifies it.

The Heller decision was a victory for the written Constitution over the blathering by activist judges who pretend that the Constitution is a "living" document that they can reinterpret according to their personal biases about "evolving standards." It was also a victory for the active advocacy of private citizens who understand the Constitution and can effectively refute judicial heresies.

For the first 150 years of our country's existence, the right to own firearms was generally accepted. The militia referred to in the Second Amendment consisted of all able-bodied men, and they were expected to possess and use firearms.

James Madison wrote in the Federalist Papers, No. 46: Americans have "the advantage of being armed" — unlike the citizens of other countries where "the governments are afraid to trust the people with arms." During Virginia's Convention to ratify the Constitution, Patrick Henry said: "The great objective is that every man be armed. ’?¶ Everyone who is able may have a gun."

In the middle of the 20th century, when liberals began to restrict liberties and propagate the notion that government knows better than individuals how to run our lives and spend our money, proposals for gun control became politically correct. From about 1950 to about 1990, law professors and judges who wanted to be politically correct adopted the erroneous view that the Second Amendment has nothing to do with an individual's right to own a gun and that the "militia" refers only to government-appointed law enforcement groups.

One academic's prize-winning book claimed that guns were not widely owned by individuals at the time of the American Revolution, but his book was exposed as a fake.

By 2001, the United Nations tried to demonize the private ownership of guns and get governments to confiscate all privately owned guns.

Fortunately, the U.S. not only enjoys widespread gun ownership, but has a large number of citizens who understand the Constitution and are willing to fight for their rights.